US & Canada

US slashes UN budget

US
Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley on Sunday touted a quarter
billion dollar cut to the UN's annual budget, capping off a contentious
year between the Trump administration and the international body.

"We will no longer let the generosity of the American people be taken advantage of or remain unchecked," Haley said in a statement.

Haley
said the US had negotiated a $285 million reduction of the UN budget
for 2018-2019 compared to the budget for 2016-2017. Her announced total
was $85 million more than the $200 million cut that a UN news article said UN Secretary General António Guterres backed in October.

The UN's two-year budget is roughly $5.5 billion, and the total US contribution to the UN is more than any other nation. Haley's statement did not mention how or if the US contribution will be altered.

Stephane
Dujarric, a spokesman for Guterres, said the UN is "currently studying
the impact of the newly adopted budget numbers on the UN operations. We
expect to have a statement out later today."

A
US official told CNN that the UN's administrative and budget committee
"agreed on a range of issues related to the UN's regular budget,
peacekeeping budget, oversight and management matters and reform
initiatives."

Among the points of
agreement, the official said, included cuts with a "focus on bloated
management and support functions and rationalizing services," and
adjusting budget levels for Darfur and Haiti. Earlier in the year, the
UN reduced its peacekeeping role in Darfur, which caused concern among some human rights activists.

The
US official said the agreement secured funding for political missions
in Libya, Yemen, Colombia, Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere, as well as
creating a special envoy for Myanmar. US Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson last month said actions by Myanmar's government against the Asian nation's Rohingya Muslim minority amounted to "ethnic cleansing."

Haley's Christmas Eve announcement on cuts to the UN budget for 2018-2019 came days after the US exercised its first veto
in years at the UN Security Council. Every other member of the body,
including US allies, voted in favor of a proposal affirming
international opposition to recognizing Jerusalem as Israel's capital,
days after President Donald Trump did so and declared the US would one
day move its embassy from Tel Aviv to the contested holy city.

The UN General Assembly went on to vote on the same issue, passing a non-binding resolution disapproving of the Trump administration's decision.

Ahead of the general assembly vote, Haley announced
the US was "taking names" of those voting against the US, and
afterward, she held a party where the only countries invited were
nations that did not support the resolution on Jerusalem.

Trump praised Haley's actions before he left the White House for Christmas.

Trump campaigned in part on a pledge to reduce US commitments abroad, and Haley entered her post questioning the value of the US' funding of the UN.

Earlier this year, Haley cheered
cuts to the UN's peacekeeping budget, and Sunday's announcement on
further reductions to the UN's overall budget included a vow by the
ambassador for the "America First" administration to seek further
reductions for the UN budget.

"You
can be sure we'll continue to look at ways to increase the UN's
efficiency while protecting our interests," Haley said Sunday.